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Weekly Worker 580 Thursday June 9 2005
Alienation personified
Michael
Jackson obviously needs treatment, not punishment. His trial tells us
a lot about today's alienated society, argues Eddie Ford
Following a trial lasting four months, and involving more than 140 witnesses,
the jury is deliberating on the fate of Michael Jackson as we go to press.
The 46-year-old king of pop faces 10 charges, including four
relating to the alleged sexual abuse two year ago of a male teenager,
Gavin Arvizo, then aged 13, not to mention the lesser charges of conspiracy
to kidnap and administering an intoxicating agent to
the aforementioned youth. Jackson, if convicted, will be placed on the
sex offenders registrar and could go to jail for anything up to 18 years.
Jackson, back home at his Disneyesque Neverland ranch, was not alone in
awaiting the jurors final decision. Millions of people throughout
the world have been transfixed by the trial - whether they be die-hard
Jackson fans or determined detractors. But even if Jackson is pronounced
guilty, the entertainment need not end there.
Under US law, a sentencing hearing has to occur 20 working days after
the verdict. However, that period is often extended to give the probation
department time to file a report and for the defence to prepare post-trial
motions, which typically involves filing for a new trial and asking for
their client to be acquitted via an arrest of judgement order. The singer
could also be granted bail pending appeal, as long as it was proved that
he was unlikely to flee and posed no danger to the community.
Yes, the worlds media outlets can still look forward to raking in
the audiences - and of course the increased revenue generated by all the
countless advertising and sponsorship deals.
Almost inevitably, academic theorists are already busy writing about how
the Jackson trial is the realisation of the postmodern concept,
and so on. Hence professor Toby Miller, of the University of California
Riversides cultural studies department, informed the BBC: What
you are seeing played out in very public form is the tragedy of a psyche
and the tragedy of an empire. But professor Miller is not necessarily
spouting obscurantist scholastic nonsense, as he also alluded to what
he believed were the core reasons why the trial was being so closely followed
- that is, internationally, Jackson remains a big name, and
he represents the oddness of the United States around the world.
There is some truth here. When we look at the Jackson trial we get a glimpse
of the grotesque and profoundly unhealthy celebrity culture which the
mass media both reflects and promotes - and glorifies. Specifically, we
see how the USs freedom of speech laws are interpreted in such a
manner as to allow the type of blanket media coverage that has accompanied
the Jackson trial - a coverage, it should be noted, which is quite alien
to many other countries where discussion of court cases is outlawed, or
severely curtailed, in order to avoid prejudicing juries.
So we have had the spectacle of television shows doing mock Jackson trials
and inviting the audiences to vote in their verdicts - as if Michael Jackson
was a contestant on Big brother or Celebrity love island. Truly horribly,
reporters are filming at the jail where Jackson could serve time if he
is found guilty - but if that is what the punters want, then give it to
them. Experts are even analysing the jurors clothes for clues on
how they are minded, and souvenir photographs of the Jackson trial, you
will be glad to hear, are now available at a no doubt reasonable cost.
During the trial we had an ugly scrum, as dozens of television crews jostled
for the best views of the courthouse, with each news organisation having
its own designated, fenced-off space in the parking lot - right next to
the dozens of satellite trucks monitoring the proceedings day and night.
When the verdict is finally delivered, expect a media frenzy like no other
- as if engaged in a military operation, helicopters will scramble to
track the singers entourage as it leaves his home and a posse of
desperate reporters will hurtle into court as if their lives depend on
it. These are all indications of a perverse and distorted society.
In some respects, the enigmatic, and undoubtedly weird, Michael Jackson
almost defies comprehension. Indeed, over the years, Jackson has become
a near mythical figure - but, then again, most myths contain at least
a kernel of truth. So, at one stage a group of American Jehovahs
Witnesses rather optimistically announced that Jackson was the messiah.
Then we have the mysterious change in Jacksons skin pigmentation,
with it being said that he was taking a course of powerful drugs in order
to become paler. Jackson has also undergone extensive plastic surgery
to alter his appearance - though once again that has been denied, and
we all recall the photographs which heavily suggested that he slept in
a special chamber, or oxygen bubble, in an attempt to prevent
himself from ageing.
Furthermore, Jackson was mercilessly hounded and humiliated by the media
when it came to his two disastrous marriages - first in May 1994 to Lisa
Marie Presley (daughter of the not exactly well-balanced Elvis), which
collapsed after 19 months, giving rise to rumours that the whole thing
had been merely a set-up, or blind, to improve his tarnished
image (it was widely believed that the marriage was never even consummated).
The next marriage was to Debbie Rowe, which ended in October 1999, but
produced three children. However, once again it was suggested that this
apparent display of normality was not what it seemed, as stories circulated
that this marriage too had been unconsummated - and that in fact the children
had been conceived using an assorted and colourful array of artificial
inseminatory techniques, though there has never been any evidence of Jackson
being either infertile or impotent.
On top of all that, Jackson has openly admitted to being addicted to painkillers
and various prescription drugs. Perhaps worse of all, though, he has adopted
the spoon-bending crackpot and Exeter City FC-supporting Uri Geller as
his personal advisor. No wonder the guys in so much
trouble.
You do not have to be Sigmund Freud to regard Jackson as a walking case
study, if not a master class, in alienation and estrangement. However,
this is hardly surprising when you consider for a moment Jacksons
highly unusual, if not aberrant, childhood and upbringing.
As a founder member of the Jackson Five, the young Michael - who modelled
his dance moves and vocal styling on James Brown - acquired astounding
levels of fame and money from a grotesquely early age. Thus, at the mere
age of five, he was becoming the Jacksons Fives leading persona
- definitely not playing with his train set or mucking about with his
coloured crayons and action men. Surely, this would be enough to warp
anyone, in some way or another.
In 1992, though it did not come as any great shocking revelation, he told
the Oprah Winfrey show of his domineering, bullying father, who relentlessly
pushed Michael more and more into the limelight, at the expense of living
any sort of normal or satisfying childhood. In reality, behind the razzmatazz
and glitter, Jackson had led a stunted, miserable life - being more a
slave to celebrity and its trappings rather than an social personality.
Overall, it is hard to escape the conclusion that Jackson is a sad, lonely,
alienated, hypochondriac who has lived a bizarre twilight existence, essentially
cut off from the rest of humanity and hence prone to unhealthy and morbid
whims, desires and fancies - but of course that does not automatically
make him a criminal, let alone a serial paedophile who uses
pornography and alcohol in order to groom young
boys, as the prosecution lawyer at the trial invited us to believe.
For communists, the key point to emphasis is that, whether guilty of the
charges or not, the plainly troubled Jackson needs help - not to be cast
into the hell of the US prison system which criminally contains some two
million inmates - disproportionally black. Clearly, Jackson needs some
sort of emotional-psychological and spiritual rehabilitation, which requires
more contact with broader society, not to make his world even isolating,
tinier and more miserable than it is has been up to now.
More generally, leaving Jackson aside, communists fight for the humane
and civilised treatment of all prisoners - sex offenders included. Dysfunctions,
psycho-sexual or otherwise, are best treated with a view to rehabilitation
and re-education than with a vengeful desire to destroy lives by imprisonment,
the sex-offenders register, naming and shaming, etc.
Jailing people who suffer from disturbing sexual impulses and predilections
will more than likely create, alongside the universities of crime that
are actually todays prisons, auxiliary specialised colleges of paedophilia
in the rule 43 segregated wings of the same prisons: hardly
an effective way of eradicating or reducing damaging social problems.
The Jackson trial has also, once again, exposed the fundamentally amoral
nature of the pop industry which, as currently constituted, is all about
the exploitation of children, whether as performers or consumers - and
who can deny that the young Michael Jackson was ruthlessly exploited,
both by his father and the pop moguls?
Historically, the cynical manipulation of the fancies and fantasies of
pre- and early teen girls and boys, especially girls, is what the bubblegum
pop producers rely on to sell records and make big profits. Such an industry
by its very nature breeds, rears and generates greed, cynicism and, often,
malfunctioning and thoroughly one-dimensional, non-rounded, human beings.
Eddie Ford
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